Close X
Sunday, September 29, 2024
ADVT 
International

13-Year-Old Indian-Origin Boy Dhruv Garg Gets Top Score In Mensa IQ

IANS, 28 Aug, 2017 01:01 PM
    A 13-year-old Indian-origin boy in the UK has got the highest possible score of 162 on a Mensa IQ test, placing him in the top one per cent people in the world who achieved this feat.
     
    Dhruv Garg, from Wokingham in south east England, was looking for something to occupy his time during the summer holidays and decided to try out for the intellectual society.
     
    The schoolboy achieved 162 in his entry IQ test - the maximum possible, which places him in the top one per cent of people in the world, the Daily Mirror reported.
     
    He also scored in the highest mark in the second test, known as the Culture Fair scale, getting 152.
     
    This score qualifies him amongst the rare one per cent of the population who take the Mensa exam worldwide in both the exams.
     
    Garg, who goes to Reading School, a grammar in Berkshire, has also been developing an app to combat social isolation by helping lonely people meet up.
     
    The app connects people who live in the same area who want to meet new people.
     
    "I was just so surprised to get the result. I was looking for something to do over the summer holidays and so I thought I'd try taking the test, but did not expect to do so well," he said.
     
     
    "I'm really looking forward to the new school year, I really like school and want to use the app to help people," Garg said.
     
    His mother, Divya, said the whole family is proud of their young prodigy, whoes favourite subjects are maths and chemistry.
     
    "When he got the maximum score they told me it's the highest mark possible but I didn't realise what it meant. It was only when I spoke to Mensa that they told me I said 'oh my God' this is special, this is really something worth celebrating," she said.
     
    A keen cricketer and table tennis player, Garg can also complete a Rubik's Cube in under 100 seconds.
     
    "In year one was when we started to realise he was gifted as his teachers said he was very sharp and had to have special lessons, so all along he was always special. He is an avid reader and reads a lot of journals," Garg's mother said.
     
    Mensa is believed to be the largest and oldest high IQ society in the world. Membership is open to anyone who can demonstrate an IQ in the top two per cent of the population, measured by a recognised or approved IQ testing process. 

    MORE International ARTICLES

    US Imposes Sanctions On Hafiz Saeed And Three Other Pakistan-based Extremists

    The US has imposed sanctions on Pakistan-based extremists and an organisation run by Mumbai attack mastermind Hafiz Saeed's JuD group as part of an effort to disrupt their leadership and fund-raising networks.

    US Imposes Sanctions On Hafiz Saeed And Three Other Pakistan-based Extremists

    Critics Slam Ivanka Trump's Book, Makes Cut For NYT Bestseller List

    Critics Slam Ivanka Trump's Book, Makes Cut For NYT Bestseller List
    From Buzzfeed to Huffington Post and Business Insider, the list of publications which have brutally thrashed this new book goes on and on. On the other hand, the book is doing well commercially.

    Critics Slam Ivanka Trump's Book, Makes Cut For NYT Bestseller List

    28-Year-Old Indian National Pleads Guilty To Call Centres Scam In Us

    28-Year-Old Indian National Pleads Guilty To Call Centres Scam In Us
    Bharat Kumar Patel, 43, previously pleaded guilty for his role in the fraud and money laundering scheme.

    28-Year-Old Indian National Pleads Guilty To Call Centres Scam In Us

    Dutch Court Rules 12-Year-Old Boy Can Refuse Chemotherapy

    Dutch Court Rules 12-Year-Old Boy Can Refuse Chemotherapy
    THE HAGUE, Netherlands — A judge in the Netherlands has ruled that a 12-year-old boy does not have to undergo chemotherapy if he does not want it.

    Dutch Court Rules 12-Year-Old Boy Can Refuse Chemotherapy

    Michelle Obama Criticizes Trump School Lunch Decision

    WASHINGTON — Former first lady Michelle Obama is criticizing a Trump administration decision to delay federal rules aimed at making school lunches healthier.

    Michelle Obama Criticizes Trump School Lunch Decision

    Ten Indian-Origin MPs Set For Tough Fight In UK General Election

    Ten Indian-Origin MPs Set For Tough Fight In UK General Election
    Ten Indian-origin MPs who made it to the House of Commons in the last UK general elections are set for a tough fight in the June 8 polls as Britain's major political parties finalised their list of prospective candidates.

    Ten Indian-Origin MPs Set For Tough Fight In UK General Election